Now showing 1 - 3 of 3
  • Publication
    Health information literature across the cultural evolutionary divide
    This paper details the process involved in developing the theoretical framework of factors for a major study entitled “Factors influencing the implementation of ICD-10 in Saudi public hospitals”. An original systematic review strategy, together with specific features of Endnote bibliographic manager software, were used to classify the global literature, separating it into the categories of developed nations and developing nations and, again, nationally according to the national modifications of ICD-10. Finally, the separated literature was examined under three categories, namely Health information, Organization, and National, in order to cast light on how such a process could be implemented in Saudi public hospitals. The issue has not been previously discussed in the Saudi literature. Saudi Arabia is attempting to implement ICD-10 from scratch without the background of a history of earlier ICD version usage. The results of the systematic review indicate a combination of barriers facing healthcare organizations in implementing ICD-10, including a lack of training, specialists, awareness, technology, resources, and some administration barriers. However, in terms of the reality of developing nations, more applicable practical advice was found in the healthcare literature of Thailand, rather than in that of the OECD nations. As ICD-10 is a new phenomenon in Saudi public hospitals and, based on the findings of this paper, it is possible that implementation may best be underpinned by Rogers’ Theory of Diffusion of Innovations, although certain factors that are essential for its success illustrate that an organizational application Maslow’s Triangle applies in dealing with these factors first.
  • Publication
    Historical development of the statistical classification of causes of death and diseases
    (Cogent OA, 2021) ; ; ;
    Shiri, Rahman
    This paper offers an historical overview of international mortality/healthcare classification systems, covering developments from the International List of Causes of Death (ILCD) through to the International Classification of Diseases (ICD). The ICD is a global data system established to classify diseases and mortality causes. The past few decades have seen a dramatic increase in use of the ICD, paralleling its improved efficiency and integration into the health information management (HIM) arena. The ICD, published by the World Health Organization (WHO) since 1984, is the successor to ICLD-5 and assigns codes to every health diagnosis. The 10th revision of the WHO International Statistical Classification of Diseases and Related Health Problems (ICD-10-CM) is the latest version, and the 11th is currently under development. A clinical classification and coding schedule is essential for improving and refining clinical data systems in numerous ways, including treatment selection, cause-of-death reporting, eligibility selection, the facilitation of health insurance claims, data storage, health service evaluation, health policy, the management of epidemiological diseases, resource allocation and the reduction of potential costs. All these contribute to proper development and planning within healthcare services. ICD has become the universal standard.
  • Publication
    Factors Influencing the Implementation of ICD-10-AM and Clinical Coding in Saudi Public Hospitals: A Concurrent Triangulation Mixed Methods Research Design
    (University of New England, 2020-12-08) ; ;

    Rapid economic growth resulting from the ascendancy of Saudi Arabia as an international oil producer, and the recognition by the government of the right of all citizens and most expatriate workers to free healthcare facilitated the development of a three-tier health system ranked 26th in the world by the World Health Organisation in 2000. Concurrently, the increasing financial burden of interwoven demographic and socioeconomic factors such as unprecedented population growth, increased life expectancy, and the rise of noncommunicable diseases, necessitated the diversification of health funding in the form of mandatory healthcare insurance. The coding of the clinical documentation of diagnoses and interventions of patient health episodes by clinical coders has become the international standard for submitting health insurance claims and in 2013, a contract was negotiated with the Australian government to adopt the complete ICD-10-AM package.

    A mixed methods approach was selected to determine the factors impacting on the ICD-10-AM implementation in seven public hospitals, which had not previously submitted claims or employed clinical coders. Data were obtained from a quantitative Likert scale questionnaire completed by a random sample of 283 respondents and a qualitative semistructured interview was conducted with seven purposively selected experts while only one physician indicated a desire to be interviewed. Instrument design and content were based on factors drawn from ICD-10 implementation literature representing developed and developing nations. The reviewed Saudi literature covered healthcare management, staffing conditions, inadequate technology and interoperability, and the failure to follow through with previous reform attempts.

    Derived factors were categorised as organisational (planning, staffing, training, and technology); Health information (purpose, benefits, practice, and a knowledge of anatomy, pathology, and interventions); National (implementation support, funding, maintenance, upgrading, and the unified system). SPSS computation of the 5-point Likert scale (1 = strongly agree; 5 = strongly disagree) yielded an overall mean of 4.01 for the 23 items, foreshadowed by a strong negative response to three demographic items querying prior clinical coding certification or ICD-10 training, and implementation status. A 9% minority of highly qualified professionals differed from the majority. Three years after the original implementation date, factors deemed essential, particularly organisational awareness, training, and adequate staff specialists were still being ignored.

    Most respondents had been excluded from job-specific training, showed little understanding of the relevance of ICD-10 and clinical coding in health information management, or a vision of their hospital as a component of a national system. In the only hospital practicing clinical coding it was tasked to the physicians, continuing a Saudi pattern of mediocre reform attempts symptomatic of a fragmented health system lacking leadership.